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Austro-Tai hypothesis

 

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Austro-Tai hypothesis



 
 
Austro-Tai is a hypothesis that the Kradai (Daic) and Austronesian
Austronesian languages

The Austronesian languages are a language family widely dispersed throughout the islands of Maritime Southeast Asia and the Pacific, with a few members spoken on continental Asia....
 language families of southern China and the Pacific are genealogically related.

The Kradai languages contains numerous cognate
Cognate

Cognates in linguistics are words that have a common etymology origin.An example of cognates within the same language would be English shirt vs....
s with Austronesian which were noticed as far back as Schlegel in 1901. These are considered to be too many to explain as chance resemblance (Reid 2006). The question then is whether they are due to language contact—that is, borrowing—or to common descent—that is, a genealogical relationship.

The evidence
The first proposal of a genealogical relationship was that of Paul Benedict in 1942, which he expanded upon through 1990.






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Austro-Tai is a hypothesis that the Kradai (Daic) and Austronesian
Austronesian languages

The Austronesian languages are a language family widely dispersed throughout the islands of Maritime Southeast Asia and the Pacific, with a few members spoken on continental Asia....
 language families of southern China and the Pacific are genealogically related.

The Kradai languages contains numerous cognate
Cognate

Cognates in linguistics are words that have a common etymology origin.An example of cognates within the same language would be English shirt vs....
s with Austronesian which were noticed as far back as Schlegel in 1901. These are considered to be too many to explain as chance resemblance (Reid 2006). The question then is whether they are due to language contact—that is, borrowing—or to common descent—that is, a genealogical relationship.

The evidence


The first proposal of a genealogical relationship was that of Paul Benedict in 1942, which he expanded upon through 1990. This took the form of an expansion of his Austric phylum, and posited that Kradai and Austronesian had a sister relationship within Austric. This was not generally received well by linguists for a variety of reasons: Austric as a whole had not been demonstrated; Benedict dealt mostly with typological evidence, which could be explained as areal features; he erroneously included a number of demonstrable Chinese loans in his reconstruction; and his methods of reconstruction
Comparative method

In linguistics, the comparative method is a technique for studying the development of languages. It requires the use of two or more languages. It is opposed to the method of internal reconstruction, which studies the internal development of a single language over time....
 were idiosyncratic and considered unreliable. For example, Thurgood (1994) examined Benedict's claims and concluded that since the sound correspondences and tonal developments were irregular, there was no evidence of a genealogical relationship, and the numerous cognates must be chalked up to early language contact.

However, the fact that many of the Austro-Tai cognates are found in core vocabulary, which is generally resistant to borrowing, continued to intrigue scholars. There were later several advances over Benedict's approach: Abandoning the larger Austric proposal; focusing on lexical reconstruction and regular sound correspondences; including data from additional branches of Kradai, Hlai and Kra; using better reconstructions of Kradai; and reconsidering the nature of the relationship, with Kradai possibly being a branch (daughter) of Austronesian.

Ostapirat (2000) reconstructed proto-Kra, one of the least-well attested branches of Kradai. In (Ostapirat 2005) he presents fifty core vocabulary items found in all five branches of Kradai, and demonstrated that half of them—words such as child, eat, eye, fire, hand, head, I, you, louse, moon, tooth, water, this, etc., can be related to proto-Austronesian by regular sound correspondences, a connection which Reid (2006) finds convincing.

Austronesian is characterized by disyllabic roots, whereas Kradai is predominantly monosyllabic. It appears that in Kradai, the first vowel reduced
Vowel reduction

Vowel reduction is the term in phonetics that refers to various changes in the acoustic quality of vowels, which are related to changes in stress , sonority, duration, loudness, articulation, or position in the word , and which are perceived as "weakening"....
 and then dropped out, leaving a consonant cluster
Consonant cluster

In linguistics, a consonant cluster is a group of consonants which have no intervening vowel. In English, for example, the groups and are consonant clusters in the word splits....
 which frequently reduced further to a single consonant. For example, the proto-Austronesian root *qudip "live, raw" corresponds to Kra kthop and Tai dip.

In proto-Kradai, there appear to have been three tones in words ending in a sonorant
Sonorant

In phonetics and phonology, a sonorant is a speech sound that is produced without turbulent airflow in the vocal tract. Essentially this means a sound that's "squeezed out" or "spat out" is not a sonorant....
 (vowel or nasal consonant), labeled simply A, B, C, plus words ending in an stop consonant
Stop consonant

A stop, plosive, or occlusive is a consonant sound produced by stopping the airflow in the vocal tract. The terms plosive and stop are usually used interchangeably, but they are not perfect synonyms....
, D, which did not have tone. In general, Austronesian words ending in a sonorant correspond to A, and words ending in a stop correspond to D. This accounts for most of the words. There are also a few cognates with B and C tone. From Indic borrowings it appears that tone B was originally a final h in Kradai, and some of the corresponding Austronesian roots also end in h, such as AN *q?mpah "chaff", Kam-Sui paa-B (Mulam kwaa-B), though there are few examples to go on. Tone C seems to have originally been creaky voice
Creaky voice

In linguistics, creaky voice , is a special kind of phonation in which the arytenoid cartilages in the larynx are drawn together; as a result, the vocal folds are compressed rather tightly, becoming relatively slack and compact....
 or a final glottal stop. It may correspond to *H, a laryngeal consonant of uncertain manner, in proto-Austronesian (AN *quluH "head", Thai klau-C), but again the number of cognates is too low to draw firm conclusions.

Sagart (2005) builds on this data with a newly described Kra language, Buyang
Buyang language

Buyang is a Kradai languages language spoken in Guangnan and Funing Counties, Yunnan Province, China. It is important to the reconstruction of Austro-Tai as, uniquely in Kradai, it retains the disyllabic roots characteristic of Austronesian languages....
, which—apparently alone among the Kradai languages—retains the disyllabic roots characteristic of Austronesian. Some examples are:

Root BuyangProto-MP
"to die"*matay
"eye"*mata
"head"*quluH
"eight"*walu
"bird"The relationship Among scholars who accept the evidence as definitive, there is disagreement as to the nature of the relationship. Benedict attempted to show that Kradai has features which cannot be accounted for by proto-Austronesian, and that therefore it must be a separate family coordinate with Austronesian (a sister relationship). Ostapirat concluded that these reconstructed linguistic features are spurious. However, he could not rule out the possibility that Kradai tone cannot be explained, and so leaves the question open pending further reconstruction of proto-Austronesian. He supports the consensus hypothesis of several scholars that proto-Austronesian was spoken on Formosa or adjacent areas of coastal China, and that the likely homeland of proto-Kradai was coastal Fujian
Fujian

is one of the Province of China on the southeast coast of People's Republic of China. Fujian borders Zhejiang to the north, Jiangxi to the west, and Guangdong to the south....
 or Guangdong
Guangdong

Guangdong is a political divisions of China on the southern coast of People's Republic of China. The province is also known by an alternative English language name, the Canton Province....
 as part of the neolithic Longshan
Longshan culture

The Longshan culture was a late Neolithic culture in China, centered on the central and lower Yellow River and dated from about 3000 BC to 2000 BC....
 culture. The spread of the Kradai peoples may have been aided by agriculture, but any who remained near the coast were eventually absorbed by the Chinese.

Sagart, on the other hand, holds that Kradai is a branch of Austronesian which migrated back to the mainland from northeastern Formosa long after Formosa was settled, but probably before the expansion of Malayo-Polynesian out of Formosa. The language was then largely relexified
Relexification

Relexification is a term in linguistics used to describe the mechanism of language change by which one language replaces much or all of its lexicon, including basic vocabulary, with that of another language, without drastic change to its grammar....
 from what he believes may have been an Austro-Asiatic language. Robert Blust
Robert Blust

Robert A. Blust is a prominent linguist in several areas, including historical linguistics, lexicography and ethnology. He was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, and raised in California....
(1999) suggests that proto-Kradai speakers originated in the northern Philippines and migrated from there to Hainan island (hence the diversity of Kradai languages on that island), and were radically restructured following contact with Hmong-Mien and Sinitic
Chinese language

Chinese or the Sinitic language is a language family consisting of language mutually unintelligible to varying degrees. Originally the indigenous languages spoken by the Han Chinese in China, it forms one of the two branches of Sino-Tibetan languages of languages....
.

However, Ostapirat maintains that Kradai could not descend from Malay-Polynesian in the Philippines, and likely not from the languages of eastern Formosa either. His evidence is in the Kradai sound correspondences, which reflect Austronesian distinctions that were lost in Malayo-Polynesian and even Eastern Formosan
Austronesian languages

The Austronesian languages are a language family widely dispersed throughout the islands of Maritime Southeast Asia and the Pacific, with a few members spoken on continental Asia....
. These are proto-AN *t and *C, also *n and *N, which were distinct in proto-Kradai but which fell together as *t and *n in proto-MP and Eastern Formosan; and *S, which is *s in proto-Kradai but *h in proto-MP. There are also Austro-Tai roots which are not attested from Malayo-Polynesian, such as *Cumay "bear". (Western MP has *biRua?.)

Sagart proposes an Eastern Formonan–Malayo-Polynesian connection with Kradai, based on words such as proto-Kradai *maNuk and Eastern Formosan *manuk "bird", as compared to proto-Austronesian, where the word for "bird" was *qayam, and *maNuk meant "chicken", and a few other words such as *lima "five" and *-mu "thou" which have not been reconstructed for proto-Austronesian. However, Ostapirat notes Kradai retains the Austronesian *N in this word, which had been lost from Eastern Formosan and Malayo-Polynesian, and that a change in meaning from "chicken" to "bird" could easily have happened independently, for example among proto-Kradai speakers when they borrowed the mainland word *ki "chicken" (cognate with Old Chinese
Old Chinese

Old Chinese , or Archaic Chinese as used by linguist Bernhard Karlgren, refers to the Chinese language spoken from the Shang Dynasty , well into the Former Han Dynasty ....
 *kej and Miao /qai/).

Sagart suggests that Austro-Tai is ultimately related to the Sino-Tibetan languages
Sino-Tibetan languages

The Sino-Tibetan languages form a language family composed of, at least, the Chinese language and the Tibeto-Burman languages, including some 250 languages of East Asia, Southeast Asia and parts of South Asia....
 and has its origin in a Neolithic communities of the coastal regions of prehistoric North China
North China

Northern China or North China is a geographical region of China. The heartland of North China is the North China Plain.It is defined by the People's Republic of China to include the Municipality of China of Beijing and Tianjin, the Provinces of China of Hebei and Shanxi, and Inner Mongolia....
 or East China
Eastern China

Eastern China or East China may mean:* East China* East China Township, Michigan - East China Charter Township in Michigan, USA* ECNU - East China Normal University...
. Ostapirat, by contrast, sees connections with the Austro-Asiatic languages
Austro-Asiatic languages

The Austro-Asiatic languages are a large language family of Southeast Asia, and also scattered throughout India and Bangladesh. The name comes from the Latin word for "south" and the Greek language name of Asia, hence "South Asia." Among these languages, only Vietnamese language, Khmer language, and Mon language have a long established record...
 (in Austric), as Benedict had. Reid notes that the two approaches are not incompatible, if Austric is valid and can be connected to Sino-Tibetan.

Bibliography

  • Benedict, Paul K. (1942). "Thai, Kadai and Indonesian: a new alignment in south east Asia." American Anthropologist 44.576-601.
  • Benedict, Paul K. (1975). Austro-Thai language and culture, with a glossary of roots. New Haven: HRAF Press. ISBN 0875363237.
  • Benedict, Paul K. (1990). Japanese/Austro-Tai. Ann Arbor: Karoma. ISBN 0897200780.
  • Blench, Roger (2004). Paper for the Symposium : Human migrations in continental East Asia and Taiwan: genetic, linguistic and archaeological evidence. Geneva, June 10-13.
  • Carr. M. (1986). Austro-Tai *Tsum(b)anget 'spirit' and Archaic Chinese *XmwângXmwet [Chinese characters for huanghu] 'bliss. Tokyo: Tokyo Gaikokugo Daigaku.
  • Li, Hui (2005). Genetic structure of Austro-Tai populations. PhD Thesis of Human Biology, Fudan University.
  • Ostapirat, Weera. 2005. "Kra-Dai and Austronesian: Notes on phonological correspondences and vocabulary distribution." Laurent Sagart, Roger Blench & Alicia Sanchez-Mazas, eds. The Peopling of East Asia: Putting Together Archaeology, Linguistics and Genetics. London: Routledge Curzon, pp. 107-131.
  • Reid, LA (2006). "Austro-Tai Hypotheses". Pp. 740-741 in Keith Brown (editor in chief), The Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics, 2nd edition.
  • Sagart, Laurent. (2002). Paper presented at Ninth International Conference on Austronesian Linguistics (ICAL9). 8-11 January 2002. Canberra, Australia.
  • Sagart, L. 2004. "The higher phylogeny of Austronesian and the position of Tai-Kadai." Oceanic Linguistics 43.411-440.
  • Sagart, Laurent 2005. "Sino-Tibetan-Austronesian: an updated and improved argument." Laurent Sagart, Roger Blench & Alicia Sanchez-Mazas, eds. The Peopling of East Asia: Putting Together Archaeology, Linguistics and Genetics. London: Routledge Curzon, pp. 161-176.
  • Thurgood, G. (1994). "Tai-Kadai and Austronesian: the nature of the relationship." Oceanic Linguistics 33.345-368.